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United Press Direct Wire Service Z-42
SOUTHERN
DAILY
CALIFORNIA
TROJAN
Editorial Office*
Rl-4111 Sta. 227 Night--PR. 4776
raternities ^eet Today
Los Angeles, California, Thursday, Olcober 6, 1938
Number 14
llumni p Direct Icnferences
By Oscar Lieffers
tinning this afternoon with a of discussions, and meeting banquet tonight, members of in fraternities will today und-Lke their first interfraternity Terence under the sponsorship of |USC interfraternity council.
|ne! groups under the direc-of alumni will meet at j. in the Student Union social te to discuss several fratemity lems H Deane Campbell will [charge of the topic of rushing.
sion on the finances of fra-btics will be supervised by Tom while the relationship be-education and the fraternity will be directed by Ralph
Jerve to speak
cial guests, as well as alumni all fraternity men and pledges, jttend a dinner in Town and n at 6:30 p.m. Shirley Meserve, past national president of Phi Kappa I’si, will be the speaker of thc el ing. A. R Anderson will serve as Dastmaster.
Oiests for the dinner will in-dud Dr. Rufus B. von KleinSmid pra ident of USC. Dean Stone and Dca i Miller of the University of California at Los Angeles, and Dr. Clel and and Dr. Bollm of Occi-den al college.
MEMBERS TO ATTEND Udent guests trom Occidental c()I|Be who will be present arc Ctif Did Ferrell, student body prees-Wsci; John Fox. president of the tots fraternity council; and Al Walz president of the associated mci students.
W idents who have been asked to id from the University of Cali-H a at Los Angeles are Don k Student body president, and Dfshon, president of the inter-piity council.
i committee in charge of mak-prrangemenLs for the confer-is headed by Mike MacBan. assisting him are Lester Ev-ri Diek Caldwell. Rod Han-*» if president of the USC inter-^Bnity council.
mC i o Make ftmp Plans
^^p)s for the 1939 summer camp
^Bndei privileged boys and a re-PBon this year s camp will be ^■lered at the University Religi-
^Jmlertntf Sunday afternoon at ome of Thomas Evans, execu-
ecretary.
Hal], chairman of the confer-^■*■11 tell oi the activities of ^Tummer camp which aifordcd f“av vacation for 40 boys of
university area
' <anip. located at Big Pines on donated to the conference by ®unty Playground association. Hitalned by money raised by Sigma, junior organization, it USC students acted as •rs for the boys and ln-them ln sports and cainp-stivitle.s Howard Jones, foot-oach awarded a silver plaque bay voted the best all-aiound
nstiors (or last summer's nan' 111 nry F|y““. president Mickey and Bob Frarv, Howard Gardner, Bill
,,e' Bruce Conner, and Her-
iwnanson.
conference will also disc •uss
and Inter-club activates.
°pf Selects rman Writer
”‘n Philosophical tenets of Ph Eucken German writer and WU1 be discussed by Dr. ~umnci Knopi at the weekly U0“ 5erv'c* at 7 a.m. to-* ln lhe Little Chapel of 8i-
• ole^of
°l Philosophy at the
M1> of Jetia during the late
Uur> Eutken wrote voium-
aboui the moral degeneracy
Period suggesting remedies
•«1 ptooienj, and empha-
*e need of a Christian ele-m iq.
Month-Old Fire Burns Briskly In Big Redwood
KINGSBURG. Oct. 6 — (l!.P)_ Speaking of "tall" stories, they are passing the word around Kingsburg today that a month-old fire is still burning briskly in the upper branches of a giant redwood (Sequoia) redwood tree in the Sequoia national forest.
Although such a thing could only happen in California, the story goes that the tree ls so tall and still growing so fast that forest rangers have given up hope of trying to scale the tree with a fire extinguisher.
They can spot the fire from the ground—with the aid of field glasses—it is said, but are afraid someone scaling the tree might perish of hunger before he could get all the way up and down.
Accordingly, they are sitting around the base of the tree and stomping out the few occasional sparks which finally find their way to earth, still burning.
Students Give Recital Today
Varied Program Offered By Six Mugician*, Swarlhoul Will Direcl
Presenting a varied program of piano and voice, the School of Music will conduct a noon recital today at 12:45 p. m. in the Recital hall under the direction of Prof. Max van Lewen Swarthout.
Catherine Cornwell, Esther Stanford. Catherine Lisenby. Catherine Eckert, and Caryl Selinger each have selected two songs representing different composers, while Teruko Hirashiki will offer a piano selection. "Barcarolle" by Griffes
Finances
Worry
France
Premier Daladier Voted Powers To Carry Out Emergency Measures
PARIS. Oct. 5—(U.P)— The senate tonight overwhelmingly voted the government of Premier Edouard Daladier full powers to carry out emergency measures necessary to pull France out of the financial crisis caused by the mobilization of her armed forces during the German-Czech war scare.
Committee Investigator Charges Attempt by Bund To Form Third Party
WASHINGTON, Oct. — (U.P.)--Jolin C. Metcalfe, committee investigator, charged today before the house inquiry into un-American activities that the German-American bund is attempting to combine 125 Fascist organizations in this J country into a powerful third party.
Metcalfe, former newspaperman*--|
who Joined the bund to obtain “in- j members told him an alignment beside" information, made his ftlle-j hind Jenkins would "aid them pol-gation as the committee plunged J itically” and he quoted Willie Kend-into an intensive study of Fascist zta. secretary-treasurer of the Las activities in the United States after Angeles group, as Saying “there testimony that both Nazi and Ita- I wouldn't be that king kong in New llan governments here are being dl- I York—La Guardia” if the consoli-rected from abroad. | dation were effected.
Metcalfe alleged that Newton Jen- “Black Shirts and a group of Ita-kins. a Chicago attorney, sought j Han war veterans,” he said, “dls-the merger for a new political par- played their new found unity with ty, and related that Herman the bund at Camp Nqrdlund. N. J., The vote in the senate was 286 Schwartzmann, Astoria. N. Y„ bund J July 18. 1937, when their leader.
AFL, CIO
Extend
Strife
Green Demands Purge in Canada Oi Rival Affiliates
leader, told him that “German-Am-ericans will be at the top of the merger.”
To substantiate his testimony, Metcalfe cited numerous instances of alleged “chumminess” among j Italian blackshirt and Nazi groups.
Salvatore Cardi. Union City, N. J., received a great cheer when he advocated a ‘punch on the nose' for
and added that the Ku Klux Klan, Pa., and Detroit have rifle and pis-silver shirts, gold shirts of Mexico. { tol ranges and that plans were and other allegedly Fascistic grjups j made in the national convention
are working with them.
Metcalfe srfid that California bund
in New York in July. 1937. for tar j get facilities for all storm troopers.
to 2. completing Daladier's drive to obtain parliamentary approval of his foreign policy — Including the "peace of Munich" and the domestic measures necessary to stabilizing the financial situation.
PARLIAMENT ADJOURNS The entire parliament adjourned shortly afterward and will not meet again until mid-November.
The only set-back the premier suffered was in shortening the term of temporary full powers from December 31, 1938, which he had asked, to November 15, when parliament is expected to reconvene.
Daladier decided to publish the financial decrees at next week's council of his ministers.
TO CONSOLIDATE SUPPORT It was understood he would consolidate the support given him on ills foreign policy, which Includes expanding the understandings reached at Munich to include rapprochement with Italy,
Although no official statement was issued it was believed Foreign Minister Georges Bonnet would soon announce thc appointment of an ambassador to Rome, the first step toward resumption of Franco-Ita-lian talks,
TO NAME AMBASSADORS
Francois Poncet may be named to the Rome post, with Leon Noel,
career diplomat now serving as am- The Trojans spent two hours ln
bassador to Warsaw, taking overlXucson {rom 9:3o to 11:30 a. m., Hftkatarf
the Berlin embassy, it was reported. vorking out on the University of WOfnen LfGDaTSlS The name of Raffaele Guariglia, Arizona field before the eyes of the president Italian ambassador to curious. The squad zipped through Buenos Aires, wras most frequently its conditioning poces with a confi-
HOUSTON. Tex.. Oct. 5 (U.P)— William Oreen. head of the American Federation of Labor, extended its war against the rebel committee for industrial organization into Canada tonight. 24 hours after President Roosevelt had appealed to the battling factions to m.ike peace.
The pudgy pink-cheeked head demanded that officials of the Canadian Trades and Labor congress “purge” its local CIO affiliates or face the financial drain which those Americans who disagree with WOuld come from withdrawal of A. Mussolini or Hitler.”
Metcalfe testified that bund posts in Philadelphia. Buffalo, Reading,
Fighter _____Churchill
Trojans Roll Eastward
Squad Makes Slops Al Tucson, El Paso,-Hoffman May Play
By Ron. Cooley Yell King
ON BOARD THE TROJAN FOOTBALL SPECIAL, Carrizozo, N. Mex., Oct. 5. Exclusive— Trojan football players and their entourage rolled on toward the Buckeye state tonight after stops at Tucson, Ariz., and El Paso, Tex., combining gridiron business with the novelty of cross-country treking.
Today's Organ Program
Larghelto and Minuet..........................
..........................Carl ton Dittersdorf
"Carl von Dittersdorf wa.s one of the first to attempt the program symphony. In 1784 he composed 12 symphonies with such titles as ‘The Four Ages of the World’ and ‘Jason and the Golden Fleece1," Sessions says.
' With such pictorial music as Dvorak's ‘New' World’ and Tschal-kowski’s ‘Patetique’ ringing in our ears, we would not regard Dit-tersdorfs works as other than ob-solute music.”
Tuo Preludes vnd Fugcs oj lhe
First Master Period Baih Chanson situs Pinoles..................Dubois
Asked To Attend
The con., lete program is as foi-' mentioned as the probable Italian dence that will last through the Meeting
lows:
Voice—
Mandoline . Debussy
Ein Traum Grieg
Catherine Cornwell Voice—
Vissi d’ Arte iTosca) Puccini O Lovely Night
Sir Landon Ranald Esther Stanford
Voice—
The Lord's Prayer Life Curran
Catherine Lisenby Piano—
Barcarolle Griffes
Teruko Hirashiki
Voice—
Fruhlingslied - Van Fielitz
Mor.art
Voi, che sapete • t Le Nozze di Figaro)
(The Marriage oi Figaro I Catherine Eckert
Voice—
Now Shines the Dew
Rubenstein The Crying of the Waters
Campbell-Tipton Caryl Selinger.
Bay City Strike Parley Called
ambassador to Paris. It was also ' Saturday fray with Ohio State believed Gabriele Puaux. former ambassador to Vienna, might take the Warsaw post.
Trevor Hawkins, women's debate quad coach, yesterday issued a call to all women interested in de-
INJURY X-RAYED
Bob Hoffman's back Injury su stained last week was responding to bating to meet in 125 Old College treatment- While the halfback was al i 30 p m. tomorrew. He stressed not in uniform when the Trojans as- the importance of attendance at sembled for their final drill ln Los thj.s meeting, as the initial debate Angeles Tuesday, he will probably 0j t,)ie season ls scheduled at Bak-play Saturday. X-rays disclosed that ersfield November 10, 11, and 12. the injury was not as serious as had Tiie question which has been se-been feared. lected for the year's debating ac-
Back on the air-conditioned cars j tivities is, Resolved: That the Unit-for a'. Tucson, the Trojan war party ■ ed States should cease using pub-Ior - x- lie funds for purposes of stimulat-
ing business.”
In issuing his call, Coach Haw-
Raubenheimer To Explain Plan
Honors Candidates
To Meet Today
Juniors who have ’applied —. ,. , .
study under the honors plan and lunched, then the players were ta Mother students who intend to ap- tored in a chalk talk. The res ply. including those in the lower-j the afternoon was spent >" readmg,
, division classes, will meet with Dr Haying bridge, napping, and listen-Albert S. Raubenheimer. dean of 1 >nB to the radio.
! t he College of Letters, Arts, and ' sal MENA SEES FAMILY j Sciences, today. j The stop a(, ei Paso was made at
Dr. Raubenheimer. director of ths 6 30 p.m„ when Sal Mena saw his upper And under classmen.
educational program, will discuss family for the first time in two J---------
| the plan privilege of students with ! years. An El Paso news reporter,
! a 2.0 grade average for their fresh- j angling for tomorrow’s copy, mis-! man and sophomore years, in his took an alumni passenger for How-; office, 200 Administration, at 2 p. artj Jones, but he was soon directed m. j to the right source.
Lists of students who have re- j The pep rally by Trojan students | vealed aptitude for study under the at the train departure , Tuesday ! plan formulated during the last night was relived at a banquet to-school year, are being compiled by i night by rooters on the train, with
F. of L- international union locals from their organization
Green spoke after W. G. Russell of Toronto, Canada, fraternal delegate to the convention, had expressed the hope that labor's internal struggle soon would be settled amicably. Bitterly attacking the CIO as a "dual organization" and blaming it for the civil strife, Green reminded the Canadians that the federation has cleaned its house of the "rebels.”
He bluntly demanded that the Canadian congrcss do likewise, saying: . .
"We are determined to have a united labor within the American Federation of Labor. The Canadian Trades and Labor congress must do likewise. They can not be for the American Federation of Labor and ' against it. Just as Abraham Lincoln , said that we can not have two federal governments, two state governments or two city governments, neither can we have two governments ln the house of labor “
Russell declined to comment on Green's demands. Hi' explained lhat the congress at its recent convention in Niagara Falls, Ont., adopted a resolution urging that ihe status quo be maintained aa rcyards affiliation of CTO union. It ls this position which w-U hiv" to be abandoned if the congress yields to Oreen’s demnna.
Lewis Calls Convention As Permanency Move
WASHINGTON, Oct. 6 —(U.P)— The Committee for Industrial Organization tonight moved to set Itself up as a permanent rival to the American Federation of Labor when CIO Chairman John L. Lewis Issued a formal call for a constitutional convention In Pittsburgh, Pa., November 14.
Lewis proclaimed the convention less than 48 hours after President Roosevelt had asked the AFL convention at Houston, Tex., to work
kins said that former members of41 for jn ranks of organized
the women’s debate squad should attend as well as any new members who are interested in debating as an activity. This Includes both
I department and school heads, was announced recently.
It
Continued on Page Three
STRIKES THREATEN COTTON GROWERS
SHAFTER, Oct, 5 (U.P)— Faced with the threat of a possible county-wide strike ol cotton pickers, principal growers In this area tonight remained steadfast In their refusal to raise the pay of the pickers from 75 cents to $1 per 100 pounds.
Sororities I To Be Pictured
Animals May Be Evicted From Lincoln Park Zoo
By United Presi
The dark gloom of depression settled over the California Zoological society at' Lincoln park tonight, and the sheriff walked in with the eviction papers.
Next Monday morning, barring the sudden fall of manna from heaven, Anna May, the veteran film pachyderm, and
Jackie, the 10-year-old wrestling*—-
lion, together with some 300 assort- first motion pictures made ln Called monkeys, ostriches, giraffes, and fornia were filmed at Sellg zoo The The peace group, equally divided jlgJjerb Editor Bud Colegrove said, i alligators will be walking the late Kathleen Williams was one of between industrialist* and labor (q [iave ajj o( use's sororities and , streets of Los Angeles—putting the the stars Hobart Bosworth was an-leaders, was stepping into a situa- | thfjr p!edt,es represented in the touch on the passers-by for a bale other, and Tom Mix played extra tlon which so far has delied the i coming edition Thus far. the so- of h*y or a side of beef roles.
efforts of Rossi and federal con- ,orltv representatives have cooper- i The zoo is broke. In a word It Anna May, the elephant, ls k-r* ciliators I 8led nearly 100 per cent. 1 was broke last spruig, but a boun- haps one of Hollywood s foremost
The Diincipal Issue is a question 1 Pnc.e of' the space offered each teous publicity campaign among the emotional actresses. She has ap-of seniority with spokesmen for 35 solorlly i„ »10 Colegrove said This Hollywood film folk and the plain peared in close U) 400 films. Indeed, department Ttoies asserting they equals one-half o, a full folk of U,s Angeles brought In i, was the »50a day that Anna May
will not consent to any plan which ,)a^f and includes pictures of each encugh money lo assure • square earned as an actress that for years gives a union control of hiring or!pledge. drawuigs of the soro:ny s meal a day for all of brother Noah a kept the ribs from showing on her
Rossi's Peace Committee To Meet Both Sides
SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 5 (LIP)
A 10-man committee commissioned j .
by Mayor Angelo Rossi to seek set- | pj yV dlTipUS
tlement of a month-old department t t _.,
store strike todav invited both sides I Social sororities at the university to meet with it tomorrow to dis- are now being contacted by Wan.-cuss the situation Pu* editors in regards to a com-
. r , ,J plete pictorial presentation of The meeting was set lor 3.30 p., ^ ^ p,ed(jes m lhp October with each side expressing will-, pubUcatl0n of lhe magazine, the editor announced yesterday.
It is the hope ol Wampus’ pub-
ingness to attend and co-operate with the committee.
labor and after Federation President William Green said bluntly that there could be no truce until the CIO capitulated.
Graduates Elect Nominators
Committee To Name
Candidates for Offices
With Dr. Rockwell D. Hunt describing the functions of their organization, students of the Graduate School elected a nominating committee for 1938 officers at their first meeting of the year yesterday.
G. Byron Done, president, announced that those students wishing to submit qualifications for the offices of president, vice-president, secretary, and treasurer must file them at the Oraduate School, 100 Administration, by Monday.
The nominating committee composed of Glenn Stewart A.B., Iowa; Ed McDonagh A.B, UBC; Joseph Spars AB DePauw; and Ruth Moser will present its report Wednesday noon, October 12.
firing ana the representatives of the I pledge and active memt more than 4000 itriking clerks are! biem*. and a conipi demanding guarantees of Job security.
A meeting was in prospect on another labor front, w»^: the acsept-ance by the CIO Warehousemen's union of an invitation to meet with
ship em- ' friend s for a few months. But the ihensive in- ] wo owss be cU rent of $4125 and ding the so- it apparently can't pay.
i “The public is Just tired of icooi-” who have not! s.lied Wolf Larsen who lutlly m, and wish ''sounded the publicity tocsin e 1 on;:snU> j “Tney'd rather get ou on tne road of I of a Sunciay than look at fine ex-
forma ion chart re
ronry's n- oph’ i 's Sorority president bee.i comrctcd as to immediately insure i;oi ucci. w»»« tion in the ire,- ilHnB P-
s art. William
animal friends.
With the eloslng of the mo Melvin Koontz, who wrestles da'ly with Jackie, the lion, and Olga Celeste, the veteran leopard trainer, also must seek more fruitful fields.
The sheriff walked In today and ordered that the animals large and small, two by two. get out and 1 usUle their own livuig, effect!
lhe Association of S. u j. c ....... ... ................... .....
distributors to discuss the deadlock with the edi> l' " A.**Sehg founded the zoo. and. In a Monday, over the little matter ol
over contracts which has closed 135 p 111 in the Wampus uimc, » ..... .................--------------
| Stoatm Union.
way, founded Hollywood, for the | the unpaid judgment ol »4U5.
Franco's Planes Bomb Barcelona
HENDAVE. France-Spanlsh Frontier. Oct 5 U'.Pi — Generalissimo Francisco Franco’s warplanes ranged over the eastern Mediterranean seaboard today ln the most widespread bombing a-tacks of the Spanish Civil war, but casualties were surprisingly few.
Barcelona was attacked 10 tunes between 9:25 p 111 yesterday and 9:55 a in. today, li lanes. Puente Toidera, Pulmos. Tarragona. Cer-vera, Tarrega, Reis and Vails bore the brunt o' oilier night raids Late today 10 planes dumped 100 bombs on Valencia. Thera were no casualties.
John
L. Lewis, CIO head, yesterday called a national convention of his organization as William Green, president of the AFL, carried the fight against the other group into Canada, demanding a purge of CIO affiliates.
Coeds To Vie In Bike Race
Sorority Pledges Will Compele Today in 'Hobohemian Handicap'
Shades of Santa Anita will tc recreated today as four Trojan coeds Jockey their motorbikes over a one-furlong course on University avenue ln thc first annual "Hobohemian’' handicap. "Post time" will be 10 a. m., the track being the section of the avenue tn front of Bovard auditorium.
The ffiur starters are pledges representing sorority houses, Louise Re-otdan will wear the colors of the Delta Gamma sorority, and Georgia Gordan those of Alpha Chi Omega. Margaret McGill will represent the Pi Beta Phi house. »nd Margaret Alman is to rac» for Kappa Alpha Theta.
BID TO BE AWARDED
The contestants will take thc post on 35th street and will follow the track up to 30th street. Turning on 3fith, the jockeys will weave their motorbikes down the home stretch on the east side of the Islands in front of Bovard, oreaklng the tape on 35th street
The Trojane whose nose first crosses the finish line wlll receive a prize of one bid to the Hobohe-mlan dance, which will be given tomorrow night by the College of Architecture.
TERNSTROM STARTER
Clint Ternstrom, director of the Hobohemian dance, will be the official starter, with Trojan Knights surveying the track as stewards.
The dance to t\hlch the wi.inlng girl will be awarded a ticket ls, states Ternstrom, an all-unlverslty and Informal affair. Given at the Valley Park club, the dance will have a "rogue’s galery” consisting of caricatures of prominent students as decoration. Entertainment between dances is to be furnished by the Bohemian quartet. Bud Perks and his campus band are to 'upply the music for dancing.
Assails
Peace
Political Veteran Contends Friendship With Nazis Impossible
LONDON, Oct. 5—tr.Ri— Winston Churchill, cherub-faced veteran of many of Britain's stormiest political battles, today warned the British empire that the only way II can avoid falling before the onrush of Fuehrer Adolf Hitler's "powei politics” ls to build the mightiest air fleet ln the world.
For a solid hour the chubby leader of the opposition conservatives stood on the floor of commons and gave the government of Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain one of the worst tongue lashings lt has ever received.
OMINOUS PROPHECV Churchill concluded his denunciation of the "peace of Munich” with this ominous prophecy:
"Never will we have friendship between the British democracy and Nazi power.”
He said all of central Europe would be drawn Into the vortex of "power politics which radiates from Berlin." and that he foresaw *‘a policy of submission" by Britain.
Shaking hls finger at the rows of government benches where many of the members sat literally squirming ln their seats, Churchill thundered:
AIR SUPREMACY ASKED
“The one method of protecting ourselves against Nazi power is to regain our old Island Independence by securing supremacy ln the air.” Churchill’s long-nourished distrust of dictators was never more apparent. Describing Chamberlain's "submission" to Hitler as an "unmitigated defeat," he said;
“Hitler demanded one pound sterling at a pistol point. When that was given, he demanded two pounds, and finally settled for one pound, 17H shillings.”
Churchill opened nre on the government after 81r John Simon, chancellor of the exchequer and a member of Chamberlain's "Inner Continued un Page Two
Foreign Agents' Fail To Register
Thousands Liable
To Prosecution Tomorrow
WASHINGTON, Oct. * —(U.P)— Thousands of persons who have failed to comply with a new law requiring "agents of foreign principals,” such as propagandists, to register with the state department by October 6, will automatically face federal prosecution after tomorrow, lt was learned tonight.
The law was enacted last June • and requires such agents register their connec tions with foreign governments. foreign business, or foreign political parties under penalty of a 11000 fine or two years imprisonment, or both.
Tonight, as the deadline approached, state department officials were concerned over the fact only a handful of such representatives had registered although more than 2000 "cautioning” letters were sent to "obvious cases.”
JAPAN’S U 8. MINISTER REPLACED
TOKYO, Oct. 6 (l’.P) — Premier and Foreign Minister Prince Fuinl-maro Konoye today completed his list ot diplomatic changes. Including replacement of Ambassador Hirosi Salto ln Washington by Kensuke Horinouclu, retiring vice muiister of foreign affairs.
Czechs Study Joining Axis
Copyright, 1938, by United Prees
LONDON, Oct. « (IIPI — New Czechoslovakia today appeared to be deserting the democracies for cooperation with the dictator states.
The republic moved rapidly Into the sphere of German-Itallan Influence, and possibly towards establishing a military dictatorship of her own.
So strong was the movsment It forced the resignation of Democratic President EM uard Benes, one of the founders of the republic, and [minted toward early and close relationship with the very dictator nations the Czechs were clamoring to fight a week ago.
When Benes’ resignation was announced. Gen. Frantlsek Hursarek, minister of public works ln the new government of "Czechoslovakia power,” hurried to Prague from Berlin bearing “far-reaching proposals" from Germany. A midnight meeting of the cabinet Immediately began study of Germany's proposals and lt was freely predicted new commercial relations between Chechoslovakia and Oermany would bf established soon.
Czech and German commercial Continued on Page Two
Debate Manager Calls Froshmen
.... Candidates for the freshmar. debate squad will meet with Ooact' Ilonicr Bell 'his afternoon at 1 o’clock ln 222 Student Union, according to Bill Barton, manager of the varsity debate team.
The call for aspirant* for manager of the freshman debate team has also been given by Barton Those Interested are asked to contact him as soon as possible.
All candidates for both the varsity and freshman squads will open the debate season officially lhi« evening at the annual smoker of the Phi Kappa Tau fratemity house.
Tryouts tor the varsity team wil. be conducted Monday, at which lime prospective members will b« required to give a ftve-mmuu> ts'k ou the subject "Bliould Uie United States cease to uss public fundQ lor the purpose <>* ness?”

United Press Direct Wire Service Z-42
SOUTHERN
DAILY
CALIFORNIA
TROJAN
Editorial Office*
Rl-4111 Sta. 227 Night--PR. 4776
raternities ^eet Today
Los Angeles, California, Thursday, Olcober 6, 1938
Number 14
llumni p Direct Icnferences
By Oscar Lieffers
tinning this afternoon with a of discussions, and meeting banquet tonight, members of in fraternities will today und-Lke their first interfraternity Terence under the sponsorship of |USC interfraternity council.
|ne! groups under the direc-of alumni will meet at j. in the Student Union social te to discuss several fratemity lems H Deane Campbell will [charge of the topic of rushing.
sion on the finances of fra-btics will be supervised by Tom while the relationship be-education and the fraternity will be directed by Ralph
Jerve to speak
cial guests, as well as alumni all fraternity men and pledges, jttend a dinner in Town and n at 6:30 p.m. Shirley Meserve, past national president of Phi Kappa I’si, will be the speaker of thc el ing. A. R Anderson will serve as Dastmaster.
Oiests for the dinner will in-dud Dr. Rufus B. von KleinSmid pra ident of USC. Dean Stone and Dca i Miller of the University of California at Los Angeles, and Dr. Clel and and Dr. Bollm of Occi-den al college.
MEMBERS TO ATTEND Udent guests trom Occidental c()I|Be who will be present arc Ctif Did Ferrell, student body prees-Wsci; John Fox. president of the tots fraternity council; and Al Walz president of the associated mci students.
W idents who have been asked to id from the University of Cali-H a at Los Angeles are Don k Student body president, and Dfshon, president of the inter-piity council.
i committee in charge of mak-prrangemenLs for the confer-is headed by Mike MacBan. assisting him are Lester Ev-ri Diek Caldwell. Rod Han-*» if president of the USC inter-^Bnity council.
mC i o Make ftmp Plans
^^p)s for the 1939 summer camp
^Bndei privileged boys and a re-PBon this year s camp will be ^■lered at the University Religi-
^Jmlertntf Sunday afternoon at ome of Thomas Evans, execu-
ecretary.
Hal], chairman of the confer-^■*■11 tell oi the activities of ^Tummer camp which aifordcd f“av vacation for 40 boys of
university area
' of Jetia during the late
Uur> Eutken wrote voium-
aboui the moral degeneracy
Period suggesting remedies
•«1 ptooienj, and empha-
*e need of a Christian ele-m iq.
Month-Old Fire Burns Briskly In Big Redwood
KINGSBURG. Oct. 6 — (l!.P)_ Speaking of "tall" stories, they are passing the word around Kingsburg today that a month-old fire is still burning briskly in the upper branches of a giant redwood (Sequoia) redwood tree in the Sequoia national forest.
Although such a thing could only happen in California, the story goes that the tree ls so tall and still growing so fast that forest rangers have given up hope of trying to scale the tree with a fire extinguisher.
They can spot the fire from the ground—with the aid of field glasses—it is said, but are afraid someone scaling the tree might perish of hunger before he could get all the way up and down.
Accordingly, they are sitting around the base of the tree and stomping out the few occasional sparks which finally find their way to earth, still burning.
Students Give Recital Today
Varied Program Offered By Six Mugician*, Swarlhoul Will Direcl
Presenting a varied program of piano and voice, the School of Music will conduct a noon recital today at 12:45 p. m. in the Recital hall under the direction of Prof. Max van Lewen Swarthout.
Catherine Cornwell, Esther Stanford. Catherine Lisenby. Catherine Eckert, and Caryl Selinger each have selected two songs representing different composers, while Teruko Hirashiki will offer a piano selection. "Barcarolle" by Griffes
Finances
Worry
France
Premier Daladier Voted Powers To Carry Out Emergency Measures
PARIS. Oct. 5—(U.P)— The senate tonight overwhelmingly voted the government of Premier Edouard Daladier full powers to carry out emergency measures necessary to pull France out of the financial crisis caused by the mobilization of her armed forces during the German-Czech war scare.
Committee Investigator Charges Attempt by Bund To Form Third Party
WASHINGTON, Oct. — (U.P.)--Jolin C. Metcalfe, committee investigator, charged today before the house inquiry into un-American activities that the German-American bund is attempting to combine 125 Fascist organizations in this J country into a powerful third party.
Metcalfe, former newspaperman*--|
who Joined the bund to obtain “in- j members told him an alignment beside" information, made his ftlle-j hind Jenkins would "aid them pol-gation as the committee plunged J itically” and he quoted Willie Kend-into an intensive study of Fascist zta. secretary-treasurer of the Las activities in the United States after Angeles group, as Saying “there testimony that both Nazi and Ita- I wouldn't be that king kong in New llan governments here are being dl- I York—La Guardia” if the consoli-rected from abroad. | dation were effected.
Metcalfe alleged that Newton Jen- “Black Shirts and a group of Ita-kins. a Chicago attorney, sought j Han war veterans,” he said, “dls-the merger for a new political par- played their new found unity with ty, and related that Herman the bund at Camp Nqrdlund. N. J., The vote in the senate was 286 Schwartzmann, Astoria. N. Y„ bund J July 18. 1937, when their leader.
AFL, CIO
Extend
Strife
Green Demands Purge in Canada Oi Rival Affiliates
leader, told him that “German-Am-ericans will be at the top of the merger.”
To substantiate his testimony, Metcalfe cited numerous instances of alleged “chumminess” among j Italian blackshirt and Nazi groups.
Salvatore Cardi. Union City, N. J., received a great cheer when he advocated a ‘punch on the nose' for
and added that the Ku Klux Klan, Pa., and Detroit have rifle and pis-silver shirts, gold shirts of Mexico. { tol ranges and that plans were and other allegedly Fascistic grjups j made in the national convention
are working with them.
Metcalfe srfid that California bund
in New York in July. 1937. for tar j get facilities for all storm troopers.
to 2. completing Daladier's drive to obtain parliamentary approval of his foreign policy — Including the "peace of Munich" and the domestic measures necessary to stabilizing the financial situation.
PARLIAMENT ADJOURNS The entire parliament adjourned shortly afterward and will not meet again until mid-November.
The only set-back the premier suffered was in shortening the term of temporary full powers from December 31, 1938, which he had asked, to November 15, when parliament is expected to reconvene.
Daladier decided to publish the financial decrees at next week's council of his ministers.
TO CONSOLIDATE SUPPORT It was understood he would consolidate the support given him on ills foreign policy, which Includes expanding the understandings reached at Munich to include rapprochement with Italy,
Although no official statement was issued it was believed Foreign Minister Georges Bonnet would soon announce thc appointment of an ambassador to Rome, the first step toward resumption of Franco-Ita-lian talks,
TO NAME AMBASSADORS
Francois Poncet may be named to the Rome post, with Leon Noel,
career diplomat now serving as am- The Trojans spent two hours ln
bassador to Warsaw, taking overlXucson {rom 9:3o to 11:30 a. m., Hftkatarf
the Berlin embassy, it was reported. vorking out on the University of WOfnen LfGDaTSlS The name of Raffaele Guariglia, Arizona field before the eyes of the president Italian ambassador to curious. The squad zipped through Buenos Aires, wras most frequently its conditioning poces with a confi-
HOUSTON. Tex.. Oct. 5 (U.P)— William Oreen. head of the American Federation of Labor, extended its war against the rebel committee for industrial organization into Canada tonight. 24 hours after President Roosevelt had appealed to the battling factions to m.ike peace.
The pudgy pink-cheeked head demanded that officials of the Canadian Trades and Labor congress “purge” its local CIO affiliates or face the financial drain which those Americans who disagree with WOuld come from withdrawal of A. Mussolini or Hitler.”
Metcalfe testified that bund posts in Philadelphia. Buffalo, Reading,
Fighter _____Churchill
Trojans Roll Eastward
Squad Makes Slops Al Tucson, El Paso,-Hoffman May Play
By Ron. Cooley Yell King
ON BOARD THE TROJAN FOOTBALL SPECIAL, Carrizozo, N. Mex., Oct. 5. Exclusive— Trojan football players and their entourage rolled on toward the Buckeye state tonight after stops at Tucson, Ariz., and El Paso, Tex., combining gridiron business with the novelty of cross-country treking.
Today's Organ Program
Larghelto and Minuet..........................
..........................Carl ton Dittersdorf
"Carl von Dittersdorf wa.s one of the first to attempt the program symphony. In 1784 he composed 12 symphonies with such titles as ‘The Four Ages of the World’ and ‘Jason and the Golden Fleece1," Sessions says.
' With such pictorial music as Dvorak's ‘New' World’ and Tschal-kowski’s ‘Patetique’ ringing in our ears, we would not regard Dit-tersdorfs works as other than ob-solute music.”
Tuo Preludes vnd Fugcs oj lhe
First Master Period Baih Chanson situs Pinoles..................Dubois
Asked To Attend
The con., lete program is as foi-' mentioned as the probable Italian dence that will last through the Meeting
lows:
Voice—
Mandoline . Debussy
Ein Traum Grieg
Catherine Cornwell Voice—
Vissi d’ Arte iTosca) Puccini O Lovely Night
Sir Landon Ranald Esther Stanford
Voice—
The Lord's Prayer Life Curran
Catherine Lisenby Piano—
Barcarolle Griffes
Teruko Hirashiki
Voice—
Fruhlingslied - Van Fielitz
Mor.art
Voi, che sapete • t Le Nozze di Figaro)
(The Marriage oi Figaro I Catherine Eckert
Voice—
Now Shines the Dew
Rubenstein The Crying of the Waters
Campbell-Tipton Caryl Selinger.
Bay City Strike Parley Called
ambassador to Paris. It was also ' Saturday fray with Ohio State believed Gabriele Puaux. former ambassador to Vienna, might take the Warsaw post.
Trevor Hawkins, women's debate quad coach, yesterday issued a call to all women interested in de-
INJURY X-RAYED
Bob Hoffman's back Injury su stained last week was responding to bating to meet in 125 Old College treatment- While the halfback was al i 30 p m. tomorrew. He stressed not in uniform when the Trojans as- the importance of attendance at sembled for their final drill ln Los thj.s meeting, as the initial debate Angeles Tuesday, he will probably 0j t,)ie season ls scheduled at Bak-play Saturday. X-rays disclosed that ersfield November 10, 11, and 12. the injury was not as serious as had Tiie question which has been se-been feared. lected for the year's debating ac-
Back on the air-conditioned cars j tivities is, Resolved: That the Unit-for a'. Tucson, the Trojan war party ■ ed States should cease using pub-Ior - x- lie funds for purposes of stimulat-
ing business.”
In issuing his call, Coach Haw-
Raubenheimer To Explain Plan
Honors Candidates
To Meet Today
Juniors who have ’applied —. ,. , .
study under the honors plan and lunched, then the players were ta Mother students who intend to ap- tored in a chalk talk. The res ply. including those in the lower-j the afternoon was spent >" readmg,
, division classes, will meet with Dr Haying bridge, napping, and listen-Albert S. Raubenheimer. dean of 1 >nB to the radio.
! t he College of Letters, Arts, and ' sal MENA SEES FAMILY j Sciences, today. j The stop a(, ei Paso was made at
Dr. Raubenheimer. director of ths 6 30 p.m„ when Sal Mena saw his upper And under classmen.
educational program, will discuss family for the first time in two J---------
| the plan privilege of students with ! years. An El Paso news reporter,
! a 2.0 grade average for their fresh- j angling for tomorrow’s copy, mis-! man and sophomore years, in his took an alumni passenger for How-; office, 200 Administration, at 2 p. artj Jones, but he was soon directed m. j to the right source.
Lists of students who have re- j The pep rally by Trojan students | vealed aptitude for study under the at the train departure , Tuesday ! plan formulated during the last night was relived at a banquet to-school year, are being compiled by i night by rooters on the train, with
F. of L- international union locals from their organization
Green spoke after W. G. Russell of Toronto, Canada, fraternal delegate to the convention, had expressed the hope that labor's internal struggle soon would be settled amicably. Bitterly attacking the CIO as a "dual organization" and blaming it for the civil strife, Green reminded the Canadians that the federation has cleaned its house of the "rebels.”
He bluntly demanded that the Canadian congrcss do likewise, saying: . .
"We are determined to have a united labor within the American Federation of Labor. The Canadian Trades and Labor congress must do likewise. They can not be for the American Federation of Labor and ' against it. Just as Abraham Lincoln , said that we can not have two federal governments, two state governments or two city governments, neither can we have two governments ln the house of labor “
Russell declined to comment on Green's demands. Hi' explained lhat the congress at its recent convention in Niagara Falls, Ont., adopted a resolution urging that ihe status quo be maintained aa rcyards affiliation of CTO union. It ls this position which w-U hiv" to be abandoned if the congress yields to Oreen’s demnna.
Lewis Calls Convention As Permanency Move
WASHINGTON, Oct. 6 —(U.P)— The Committee for Industrial Organization tonight moved to set Itself up as a permanent rival to the American Federation of Labor when CIO Chairman John L. Lewis Issued a formal call for a constitutional convention In Pittsburgh, Pa., November 14.
Lewis proclaimed the convention less than 48 hours after President Roosevelt had asked the AFL convention at Houston, Tex., to work
kins said that former members of41 for jn ranks of organized
the women’s debate squad should attend as well as any new members who are interested in debating as an activity. This Includes both
I department and school heads, was announced recently.
It
Continued on Page Three
STRIKES THREATEN COTTON GROWERS
SHAFTER, Oct, 5 (U.P)— Faced with the threat of a possible county-wide strike ol cotton pickers, principal growers In this area tonight remained steadfast In their refusal to raise the pay of the pickers from 75 cents to $1 per 100 pounds.
Sororities I To Be Pictured
Animals May Be Evicted From Lincoln Park Zoo
By United Presi
The dark gloom of depression settled over the California Zoological society at' Lincoln park tonight, and the sheriff walked in with the eviction papers.
Next Monday morning, barring the sudden fall of manna from heaven, Anna May, the veteran film pachyderm, and
Jackie, the 10-year-old wrestling*—-
lion, together with some 300 assort- first motion pictures made ln Called monkeys, ostriches, giraffes, and fornia were filmed at Sellg zoo The The peace group, equally divided jlgJjerb Editor Bud Colegrove said, i alligators will be walking the late Kathleen Williams was one of between industrialist* and labor (q [iave ajj o( use's sororities and , streets of Los Angeles—putting the the stars Hobart Bosworth was an-leaders, was stepping into a situa- | thfjr p!edt,es represented in the touch on the passers-by for a bale other, and Tom Mix played extra tlon which so far has delied the i coming edition Thus far. the so- of h*y or a side of beef roles.
efforts of Rossi and federal con- ,orltv representatives have cooper- i The zoo is broke. In a word It Anna May, the elephant, ls k-r* ciliators I 8led nearly 100 per cent. 1 was broke last spruig, but a boun- haps one of Hollywood s foremost
The Diincipal Issue is a question 1 Pnc.e of' the space offered each teous publicity campaign among the emotional actresses. She has ap-of seniority with spokesmen for 35 solorlly i„ »10 Colegrove said This Hollywood film folk and the plain peared in close U) 400 films. Indeed, department Ttoies asserting they equals one-half o, a full folk of U,s Angeles brought In i, was the »50a day that Anna May
will not consent to any plan which ,)a^f and includes pictures of each encugh money lo assure • square earned as an actress that for years gives a union control of hiring or!pledge. drawuigs of the soro:ny s meal a day for all of brother Noah a kept the ribs from showing on her
Rossi's Peace Committee To Meet Both Sides
SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 5 (LIP)
A 10-man committee commissioned j .
by Mayor Angelo Rossi to seek set- | pj yV dlTipUS
tlement of a month-old department t t _.,
store strike todav invited both sides I Social sororities at the university to meet with it tomorrow to dis- are now being contacted by Wan.-cuss the situation Pu* editors in regards to a com-
. r , ,J plete pictorial presentation of The meeting was set lor 3.30 p., ^ ^ p,ed(jes m lhp October with each side expressing will-, pubUcatl0n of lhe magazine, the editor announced yesterday.
It is the hope ol Wampus’ pub-
ingness to attend and co-operate with the committee.
labor and after Federation President William Green said bluntly that there could be no truce until the CIO capitulated.
Graduates Elect Nominators
Committee To Name
Candidates for Offices
With Dr. Rockwell D. Hunt describing the functions of their organization, students of the Graduate School elected a nominating committee for 1938 officers at their first meeting of the year yesterday.
G. Byron Done, president, announced that those students wishing to submit qualifications for the offices of president, vice-president, secretary, and treasurer must file them at the Oraduate School, 100 Administration, by Monday.
The nominating committee composed of Glenn Stewart A.B., Iowa; Ed McDonagh A.B, UBC; Joseph Spars AB DePauw; and Ruth Moser will present its report Wednesday noon, October 12.
firing ana the representatives of the I pledge and active memt more than 4000 itriking clerks are! biem*. and a conipi demanding guarantees of Job security.
A meeting was in prospect on another labor front, w»^: the acsept-ance by the CIO Warehousemen's union of an invitation to meet with
ship em- ' friend s for a few months. But the ihensive in- ] wo owss be cU rent of $4125 and ding the so- it apparently can't pay.
i “The public is Just tired of icooi-” who have not! s.lied Wolf Larsen who lutlly m, and wish ''sounded the publicity tocsin e 1 on;:snU> j “Tney'd rather get ou on tne road of I of a Sunciay than look at fine ex-
forma ion chart re
ronry's n- oph’ i 's Sorority president bee.i comrctcd as to immediately insure i;oi ucci. w»»« tion in the ire,- ilHnB P-
s art. William
animal friends.
With the eloslng of the mo Melvin Koontz, who wrestles da'ly with Jackie, the lion, and Olga Celeste, the veteran leopard trainer, also must seek more fruitful fields.
The sheriff walked In today and ordered that the animals large and small, two by two. get out and 1 usUle their own livuig, effect!
lhe Association of S. u j. c ....... ... ................... .....
distributors to discuss the deadlock with the edi> l' " A.**Sehg founded the zoo. and. In a Monday, over the little matter ol
over contracts which has closed 135 p 111 in the Wampus uimc, » ..... .................--------------
| Stoatm Union.
way, founded Hollywood, for the | the unpaid judgment ol »4U5.
Franco's Planes Bomb Barcelona
HENDAVE. France-Spanlsh Frontier. Oct 5 U'.Pi — Generalissimo Francisco Franco’s warplanes ranged over the eastern Mediterranean seaboard today ln the most widespread bombing a-tacks of the Spanish Civil war, but casualties were surprisingly few.
Barcelona was attacked 10 tunes between 9:25 p 111 yesterday and 9:55 a in. today, li lanes. Puente Toidera, Pulmos. Tarragona. Cer-vera, Tarrega, Reis and Vails bore the brunt o' oilier night raids Late today 10 planes dumped 100 bombs on Valencia. Thera were no casualties.
John
L. Lewis, CIO head, yesterday called a national convention of his organization as William Green, president of the AFL, carried the fight against the other group into Canada, demanding a purge of CIO affiliates.
Coeds To Vie In Bike Race
Sorority Pledges Will Compele Today in 'Hobohemian Handicap'
Shades of Santa Anita will tc recreated today as four Trojan coeds Jockey their motorbikes over a one-furlong course on University avenue ln thc first annual "Hobohemian’' handicap. "Post time" will be 10 a. m., the track being the section of the avenue tn front of Bovard auditorium.
The ffiur starters are pledges representing sorority houses, Louise Re-otdan will wear the colors of the Delta Gamma sorority, and Georgia Gordan those of Alpha Chi Omega. Margaret McGill will represent the Pi Beta Phi house. »nd Margaret Alman is to rac» for Kappa Alpha Theta.
BID TO BE AWARDED
The contestants will take thc post on 35th street and will follow the track up to 30th street. Turning on 3fith, the jockeys will weave their motorbikes down the home stretch on the east side of the Islands in front of Bovard, oreaklng the tape on 35th street
The Trojane whose nose first crosses the finish line wlll receive a prize of one bid to the Hobohe-mlan dance, which will be given tomorrow night by the College of Architecture.
TERNSTROM STARTER
Clint Ternstrom, director of the Hobohemian dance, will be the official starter, with Trojan Knights surveying the track as stewards.
The dance to t\hlch the wi.inlng girl will be awarded a ticket ls, states Ternstrom, an all-unlverslty and Informal affair. Given at the Valley Park club, the dance will have a "rogue’s galery” consisting of caricatures of prominent students as decoration. Entertainment between dances is to be furnished by the Bohemian quartet. Bud Perks and his campus band are to 'upply the music for dancing.
Assails
Peace
Political Veteran Contends Friendship With Nazis Impossible
LONDON, Oct. 5—tr.Ri— Winston Churchill, cherub-faced veteran of many of Britain's stormiest political battles, today warned the British empire that the only way II can avoid falling before the onrush of Fuehrer Adolf Hitler's "powei politics” ls to build the mightiest air fleet ln the world.
For a solid hour the chubby leader of the opposition conservatives stood on the floor of commons and gave the government of Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain one of the worst tongue lashings lt has ever received.
OMINOUS PROPHECV Churchill concluded his denunciation of the "peace of Munich” with this ominous prophecy:
"Never will we have friendship between the British democracy and Nazi power.”
He said all of central Europe would be drawn Into the vortex of "power politics which radiates from Berlin." and that he foresaw *‘a policy of submission" by Britain.
Shaking hls finger at the rows of government benches where many of the members sat literally squirming ln their seats, Churchill thundered:
AIR SUPREMACY ASKED
“The one method of protecting ourselves against Nazi power is to regain our old Island Independence by securing supremacy ln the air.” Churchill’s long-nourished distrust of dictators was never more apparent. Describing Chamberlain's "submission" to Hitler as an "unmitigated defeat," he said;
“Hitler demanded one pound sterling at a pistol point. When that was given, he demanded two pounds, and finally settled for one pound, 17H shillings.”
Churchill opened nre on the government after 81r John Simon, chancellor of the exchequer and a member of Chamberlain's "Inner Continued un Page Two
Foreign Agents' Fail To Register
Thousands Liable
To Prosecution Tomorrow
WASHINGTON, Oct. * —(U.P)— Thousands of persons who have failed to comply with a new law requiring "agents of foreign principals,” such as propagandists, to register with the state department by October 6, will automatically face federal prosecution after tomorrow, lt was learned tonight.
The law was enacted last June • and requires such agents register their connec tions with foreign governments. foreign business, or foreign political parties under penalty of a 11000 fine or two years imprisonment, or both.
Tonight, as the deadline approached, state department officials were concerned over the fact only a handful of such representatives had registered although more than 2000 "cautioning” letters were sent to "obvious cases.”
JAPAN’S U 8. MINISTER REPLACED
TOKYO, Oct. 6 (l’.P) — Premier and Foreign Minister Prince Fuinl-maro Konoye today completed his list ot diplomatic changes. Including replacement of Ambassador Hirosi Salto ln Washington by Kensuke Horinouclu, retiring vice muiister of foreign affairs.
Czechs Study Joining Axis
Copyright, 1938, by United Prees
LONDON, Oct. « (IIPI — New Czechoslovakia today appeared to be deserting the democracies for cooperation with the dictator states.
The republic moved rapidly Into the sphere of German-Itallan Influence, and possibly towards establishing a military dictatorship of her own.
So strong was the movsment It forced the resignation of Democratic President EM uard Benes, one of the founders of the republic, and [minted toward early and close relationship with the very dictator nations the Czechs were clamoring to fight a week ago.
When Benes’ resignation was announced. Gen. Frantlsek Hursarek, minister of public works ln the new government of "Czechoslovakia power,” hurried to Prague from Berlin bearing “far-reaching proposals" from Germany. A midnight meeting of the cabinet Immediately began study of Germany's proposals and lt was freely predicted new commercial relations between Chechoslovakia and Oermany would bf established soon.
Czech and German commercial Continued on Page Two
Debate Manager Calls Froshmen
.... Candidates for the freshmar. debate squad will meet with Ooact' Ilonicr Bell 'his afternoon at 1 o’clock ln 222 Student Union, according to Bill Barton, manager of the varsity debate team.
The call for aspirant* for manager of the freshman debate team has also been given by Barton Those Interested are asked to contact him as soon as possible.
All candidates for both the varsity and freshman squads will open the debate season officially lhi« evening at the annual smoker of the Phi Kappa Tau fratemity house.
Tryouts tor the varsity team wil. be conducted Monday, at which lime prospective members will b« required to give a ftve-mmuu> ts'k ou the subject "Bliould Uie United States cease to uss public fundQ lor the purpose <>* ness?”